Category: News

  • Subaru apresenta o novo Impreza Cosworth

    Imagens do veículo

    Foi anunciado pela Subaru, oficialmente e finalmente, as primeiras informações do novo Impreza Cosworth STI CS400, uma nova edição do clássico veículo que foi desenvolvido em parceria com a Cosworth. Essa versão “humilde” marca o retorno da Cosworth aos carros de rua, depois de passar um tempo desenvolvendo veículos poderosos para provas de Rally, como o Ford Escort e o Sierra Cosworth.

    Dentro do novo Impreza não existe tanta humildade assim, já que o capô esconde um motor com algumas modificações mecânicas que proporcionam nada menos do que 400 cv de potência, um aumento de 95 cv em relação ao Impreza WRX STi.

    Com tamanha potência, o Impreza Cosworth atinge acelera dos 0 aos 100 Km/h em 3,7 segundos, tão rápido quanto um Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 e dois segundos a menos que o Focus RS500. Outras mudanças nessa nova versão estão na suspensão alterada, que deixa o Impreza mais rebaixado, e um novo sistema de freios com discos maiores. Serão fabricados 75 unidades do Impreza Cosworth e custarão 49.995 Libras (R$ 135.695,00). Vejam algumas fotos a seguir.

    Imagens do veículo
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    Via | Auto Portal


  • Walmart Employee Fired After Trying To Stop A Shoplifter

    Here’s a sad story from Wichita, KS: A Walmart customer service manager noticed a man walking out of the store with a computer. She stopped him to ask for his receipt after the alarm went off and got punched and kicked for her trouble. After that, she got fired.

    From Kansas.com:

    The next day, about two hours before her shift was over, [the woman] says an assistant manager asked to speak with her. He then told her it’s against Wal-Mart policy for anyone but a manager or someone in asset protection to try and stop a customer from stealing.

    “He said there’s really no gray area,” [the woman] says. “It just goes straight to termination.”

    She was told to turn in her badges and keys.

    “I was in shock at first,” [the woman] says. “I didn’t think anything like this would happen.”

    Nor did she know about the policy, [the woman] says.

    “I’ve never heard of it.”

    Walmart says they’re sorry but policy is policy.

    “While we appreciate her intentions, [the employee’s] actions put her safety — and perhaps the safety of our customers — in jeopardy and, in the process, violated company policy as it pertains to how we treat people in our stores. As an unfortunate result of these circumstances, [she] is no longer employed by our company.”

    She told the Wichita Eagle that she would be filing for unemployment and looking for another job — hopefully not in retail.

    Wal-Mart employee foils a shoplifter — and loses her job [Kansas]

  • Russia ex-PM testifies Khodorkovsky arrest politically motivated

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] Former Russian prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov [BBC profile] on Monday testified that former president Vladimir Putin [official website; JURIST news archive] ordered the arrest of former oil executive Mikhail Khodorkovsky [defense website; JURIST news archive] for political reasons. Testifying before the Khamovnichesky District Court, Kasyanov stated [Moscow Times report] that after questioning Putin on the subject several times, he finally indicated that Khodorkovsky had funded the Communist Party [party website, in Russian] without first getting approval to do so from the president, prompting the arrest. The left-leaning Union of Right Forces and Yabloko [party websites, in Russian] have acknowledged receiving funding from Khodorkovsky, which, according to Kasyanov, was authorized by Putin, but the Communist Party has denied ties to Khodorkovsky. Kasyanov went on to criticize [NYT report] the practice of seeking secret presidential approval for the otherwise legal funding of political parties. Kasyanov served as prime minister under Putin from 2000 to 2004, before being dismissed along with the entire cabinet, and has since become critical of Putin. Putin currently serves as prime minister under President Dmitri Medvedev [official website; BBC profile].

    Last week, Khodorkovsky ended a two-day hunger strike [JURIST report] after a spokesperson for Medvedev indicated that Medvedev was familiar with a complaint Khodorkovsky made regarding the three-month extension of his detention. Also last week, Khodorkovsky sent an open letter to Russia’s Supreme Court [official website, in Russian] contending that Russian courts are ignoring recent changes in the law that allow people charged with economic crimes to be released on bail pending the outcome of their trials. Khodorkovsky indicated the goal of his hunger strike had been achieved [press release], and that his intention was to change the judicial system going forward and not his current situation. Khodorkovsky and his business partner Platon Lebedev [defense website] are currently serving eight-year prison sentences after being convicted [JURIST report] in 2005 on fraud and tax evasion charges stemming from an attempt to embezzle and strip their Yukos [JURIST news archive] oil company of valuable assets. They are now charged with embezzling [JURIST report] USD $25 billion worth of oil produced by Yukos. The men have pleaded not guilty [JURIST report] to the current charges, and face up to 20 additional years in prison if convicted.

  • Marla Gurecki-Haskins: Teacher Faces Sex Charges

    36-year-old teacher Marla Gurecki-Haskins was accused for having sex with a 17-year-old male student.

    Marla Gurecki-Haskins, a teacher at Canandaigua Academy since 1995, turned herself in after being accused of felony count of disseminating indecent material to a minor and three misdemeanor counts of official misconduct and endangering the welfare of a child.

    According to the police, the teacher performed oral sex on a 17-year-old male student in a classroom during school hours. She is also “participating in the nature of text messaging that encourages sexual intercourse between the accused and two male students 16 years of age,” according to court documents.

    She pleaded guilty on all counts of sex charges and was released on his own responsibility. Police say more charges could be filed.

    Police have been investigating these accusations since early April. Their investigation is not yet over for they still have almost 2,500 pages of material, mostly emails and text messages to examine.

    Related posts:

    1. Tonya Craft Verdict: Not Guilty
    2. High School Teacher Sent Nude Photos of Herself to a Student!
    3. Melissa Huckaby pleads guilty in murdering of Sandra Cantu‎

  • Cosworth puts the spurs to Subaru’s Impreza WRX STI

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    Cosworth Impreza STI CS400 – Click above for image gallery

    This is the Cosworth Impreza STI CS400, the car Cosworth said would “humble” supercars. With a 0-to-62 sprint happening in just 3.7 seconds it’ll be quicker than a whole bunch of exotics, and at £49,995 ($71,368 U.S.), it’ll be a whole lot cheaper as well. If that sounds like a boatload of cash for a warmed-over WRX, well, it is. But bear in mind that thanks to factors like the 17.5 percent Value Added Tax, UK pricing is rather different than what pricing in the States would likely look like were Cosworth to sell the CS400 here.

    The 395-horsepower, 398-pound-foot Cossie Scooby benefits from a thorough rework of its boxer-engined details, boasting new pistons, con-rods, turbocharger, exhaust and ECU mapping among its many modifications. Aiding the Impreza‘s all-wheel drive get power to the ground is a lowered suspension with components from Bilstein and Eibach.

    Looks-wise, a different front bumper fitted with mesh inserts, a rear spoiler, a track widened by 12 millimeters, and 18-inch alloys over bigger AP brakes will make sure Subaru cognescenti don’t confuse you with anything else. Identification will also be made easier by the fact that there will only be 75 made for the UK market only, and available it’ll be available in red, silver, and dark gray. Thanks to everyone for the tips!

    [Source: Cosworth via Autocar]

    Cosworth puts the spurs to Subaru’s Impreza WRX STI originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 09:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Looking ahead in retirement at Xerox …

    Day 187 from pasukaru on FlickrChildren, fiction writers and futurists like to play various versions of “what if” — all of us do now and then; it’s part of what makes us human. But few get to make it come true in quite the same way that corporate officers sometimes can.

    Anne Mulcahy got to do it late last week, for example, when she stepped down as the chairman of Xerox Corp. (XRX) after 34 years at the company; she started as a sales rep in 1976. Ursula M. Burns, the company’s chief executive, assumed the chairmanship as of May 20.

    Mulcahy’s departure was effective the same day, but in at least one sense she gets to retire like it’s 2011. According to the 8-K that Xerox filed late on Friday afternoon:

    “the Compensation Committee of Registrant’s Board of Directors, in accordance with the terms of the applicable agreement, accelerated the vesting of the Long Term Cash Incentive Award made to Mrs. Mulcahy on June 30, 2009 (as described in the Proxy Statement) in an amount equal to what Mrs. Mulcahy would receive had her retirement occurred on or after the July 1, 2011 original vesting date.”

    In other words, retire today, get a long-term cash bonus paid as if you retired 13 months later. Assuming her departure was indeed voluntary — there’s no reason to think otherwise, but it does sometimes turn out that senior executives are asked to step down — the proxy says she would have walked away on Dec. 31 with a total of $31.4 million, including $2.6 million in non-equity incentive awards, $6.4 million from equity incentive awards and $22.4 million in pension benefits — plus another $2.6 million in accumulated deferred compensation on top of that. It’s probably safe to assume the figure last week is pretty similar. (Involuntary termination without cause would add $1 million in cash to those figures.)

    One of the big recent accomplishments from Burns and Mulcahy, we’ve already observed, was the recent acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services, with the attendant 2,500 layoffs. No doubt some of them would have liked to get a check on the way out the door that looked ahead to 2011 as well.

    Image source: pasukaru via Flickr

  • New Animals in the Workplace Policy for Knoxville Campus

    To protect the health and safety of employees, students and visitors, and to maintain a professional and clean environment in which to study, work, conduct research and visit, pets are not allowed in any buildings owned or leased by the Knoxville campus with a few exceptions.

    UT Knoxville recognizes the important role pets play in the lives of many faculty, staff and students. The university also recognizes that some members of our community may have concerns regarding health — especially allergies — as well as safety as it relates to pets in the workplace.

    The campus has a new policy relating to animals in the workplace. Please review the policy and help ensure all faculty and staff are made aware of the policy. You can review it at the Office of Budget and Finance website.

    Service animals, as defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, are permissible for use by faculty, staff and students. Faculty or staff who require a service animal should consult with the Office of Equity and Diversity. Service animals, including Human Animal Bond in Tennessee (HABIT) animals, are permitted only when they are working in appropriate locations or as a part of the evaluations process.

    Approved research and instructional animals, animals professionally trained for theatrical purposes, those trained for law enforcement or search and rescue activities, animals in official university-approved parades on campus and official university mascots — including opposing teams — are allowed.

    The policy only applies to the Knoxville campus. It is not a university-wide fiscal or human resource policy. For more info e-mail [email protected].

  • Google Generated $54 Billion for Small Businesses in 2009

    Google’s image is probably one of its biggest assets and, even as it generates tens of billions of dollars in revenue, it’s still seen as a company that can do no wrong. But that has been changing lately especially in the eyes of regulators and government officials who are uneasy with Google’s increasing dominance on the onlin… (read more)

  • Adolescents Cope with Mental Illness Stigmas, Report CWRU Researchers

    Living with a mental illness can be a tough experience for adults, but with the increasing numbers of youth diagnosed and taking medications for mood disorders, it can become a time of isolation, according to a study from Case Western Reserve University Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences.

    In one of the first studies of adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 with mental illnesses and taking medications, researchers found that at least 90 percent of the study’s participants reported experiencing some form of stigma. It has lead to shame, secrecy and limiting social interactions.

    Forty adolescents in the study reported that the attitudes of parents and schools either protect against or magnify the youth’s feelings of being different or ashamed that they have a mental illness.

    Much is known about the stigmas suffered by adults, but researchers wanted to determine how similar or different the adolescent experience is from the adult one.

    The findings from this stigma study came from a secondary data from a major study that investigated the subjective experience of adolescent psychotropic treatment.

    Individuals, young and old, with mental illnesses suffer from public and self-stigmas. The researchers were concerned about how the youth internalized the public discrimination, or stereotyping of their illnesses, and if these stigmas experienced at a young age might impact the individuals as adults.

    Parents were found to be either positive or negative key players in buffering their child against these stigmas by helping them lead a normal life or they can contribute to the youth’s feelings of being different.

    “Parents, who embrace and love their children for whom they are and accept the illness as part of their child’s being, help their children overcome these stigmas,” said Derrick Kranke, the lead author on an article in Children and Youth Services Review article, “Stigma Experience Among Adolescents Taking Psychiatric Medications.”

    Besides parents, the researchers found that the school environment can have devastating effects upon the youth if they feel ostracized by their peers and teachers. The ostracism can lead youths to drop out of school, or worse, commit suicide.

    Kranke, a former elementary school teacher, is a Case Western Reserve University postdoctoral scholar at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences at Case Western Reserve University.

    He said the study’s information aided researchers in building a model to demonstrate how stigmas impact young people. Educators and social workers can design interventions to break the cycle in schools and help students accept their illnesses and become integrated into the school environment.

    This new study builds on another study underway at CWRU about the transition from home to college for students with mental illnesses and who take psychotropic drugs experience. .

    “If parents ask at orientation what can be done to help their child’s transition, it’s too late,” Kranke said, Coping with stigmas needs to begin as early as the diagnosis and the onset of medications, he explained.

    In an effort to understand what happens before these students arrive on campuses, Kranke studied 40 youths between 12 and 17. The students described their experiences during interviews and answered questions adapted from an adult stigma survey. Kranke also interviewed their parents about their child’s mental illness.

    The group studied was comprised of 60 percent females and 40 percent males. On average, the youth take two psychiatric medications. The most common mood disorders in the group were bipolar disorder and depression. More than half the group had more than one diagnosed mental illness.

    Other researchers contributing to the paper were Jerry Floersch from Rutgers University and Lisa Townsend and Michelle Munson from the social work school at CWRU. Funding for the study came from the National Institute of Mental Health.

    For more information contact Susan Griffith, 216.368.1004.

  • Fundraising ideas for non profit organizations

    Looking for a fun way to raise money for your non profit organization this summer? Your friends at fasttrackfundraising.com have a great suggestion – online magazine sales! Fasttrack Fundraising gives non profit organizations an easy and convenient way to sell a product without having to hand out catalogs or forms, add up orders, or collect any money!

    I don’t personally know anyone who doesn’t subscribe to at least one magazine. Non profit organizations can create their own magazine fundraisers and earn a percentage of the sales on a product most people pay full price for anyway! It’s a heck of a lot easier than a bake sale or a car wash 🙂

    If selling magazines doesn’t sound like the right product for your group, there are lots more great fundraising ideas for non profits, like selling popcorn, scented pencils, lollipops, even beef jerky! Register your non profit organization and get started on achieving your fundraising goals today!

  • Sustainable Montana home trains students

    Montana State student teams will collaborate with suppliers to build an ecoSmart home in the Bozeman area.  The house will feature a number of technologies, but will focus on passive heating.  …

    …   “Because of REHAU‘s involvement, a variety of other suppliers joined in the project, which will feature such sustainable building technologies as geothermal ground loop heat exchange, ground-air heat exchange; radiant heating and cooling; solar thermal energy for hot water; and insulating concrete forms.”   …

    Via Montana State University: Bozeman Sustainable House.

  • Video: T-mobile myTouch 3G Slide unboxed in front of your very eyes

    T-Mobile myTouch 3G Slide packagingWe’ve already gotten word of the T-mobile myTouch 3G Slide specs. We also know that it will be released on the 2nd of June for $179.99. We’ve even had our own hands-on. But there is one little maneuver left in the dance of phone revelations: the unboxing.

    And here it is.

    Android Community have gotten their hands on the retail packaging for the upcoming QWERTY Android device, and I felt that it was nice enough to share with you. It comes in a metal box! I don’t know if it’s just the 10 year old in me, but I think that’s pretty cool.

    They also have a slew of photos of the device, including UI shots, and the included accessories.

    Check the video out, below!

    (Pro tip, stay on past the 3:30 minute mark for some merengue beats. Most suitable for this final manoeuvre!)


  • PETA’s Got Beef With Southwest Airlines

    No stranger to controversy over its notoriously-naughty ads, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has turned its ire on Southwest Airlines after the airline deemed the animal rights group’s latest ad “too sexy” for its inflight magazine, Spirit. Pimping a vegan diet, the ad features a security scan of a woman in her underwear baring the slogan “Be Proud of Your Body Scan: Go Vegan.”

    PETA chiefs are hot under the collar over the perceived snub and have called Southwest out on its own envelope-pushing campaigns and history of sexism in a bid to defend themselves. The group cites the hotpants that Southwest flight attendants wore in the carrier’s early years and a 2009 Southwest print ad promoting the airline’s no-hidden fees campaign that read “DON’T #$*!% ME OVER.”

    “Our ad is less sensational than many of Southwest’s own promotions,” PETA senior vice president Dan Mathews remarked last week. “The airline may have canned it because the company is based in Dallas, the heart of the beef belt.”

    “Recently, Southwest Airlines rejected this ad saying that it was ‘too provocative’ for their in-flight magazine, ‘due to the lack of clothing the woman is wearing.’ Can I get a ticket to Prudes-ville via Hypocrite City, please? The only thing revealing about this ad is the fact that going vegan is the best thing that you can do for your health, the environment, and animals. Personally, on my next flight I’d much rather see metal panties with a pertinent message than another passenger wearing sweatpants with the words ‘Bootylicious’ or ‘Juicy’ stamped across the butt.”

    Here’s what Southwest spokeswoman Marilee McInnis had to say about the airlines’ new beef with PETA:

    “We are very sorry to hear that PETA is upset with the rejection of their ad — we want to ensure them that we certainly respect the right of anyone expressing their opinions or beliefs. Ultimately, our goal with Spirit Magazine is to produce a wide range of content that appeals to a wide variety of people. At the same time, we have the responsibility to determine what is appropriate for our publication and our Customers,” the statement continued. “Unfortunately, because of the illustration used, the specific ad was not a good fit for publication in our magazine. We can honestly say that it was not excluded for any reason other than the image used, and we are happy to consider other advertisement concepts from PETA in the future.”


  • Video: Comet Caught Crashing into the Sun | 80beats

    CometCrashSun
    Its doom was sealed six years ago.

    In 2004, UC Berkeley researchers say, this comet was tugged by Jupiter’s gravity into a path bound for destruction in the cauldron of the sun. And when its end finally came this March, astronomers captured the comet plunging deep into the sun on video (see below), watching it go farther into the light than any suicide comet seen before.

    Seeing comets and other small objects approach the sun is difficult because the objects are overwhelmed by the sun’s brightness. Scientists were able to track this one closer to the sun than ever, before it it burned up in the sun’s lower atmosphere [Wired.com].

    The team watched the comet with NASA’s STEREO (Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory), launched in 2006 and using satellites on opposites sides of the planet to survey the sun in 3D. The comet plunged through the corona and was tough enough to survive until it crossed into the chromosphere and met its final end.

    Based on the comet’s relatively short tail, about 1.9 million miles long, the researchers believe that the comet contained heavier elements that do not evaporate readily. This would also explain how it penetrated so deeply into the chromosphere, surviving the strong solar wind as well as the extreme temperatures, before evaporating [Daily Mail].

    The astronomers think this now-deceased comet was a Kreutz sungrazer. This is a group of comets that are the remnants of a single large comet that broke up, and periodically they graze too close for comfort and make death dives into the sun. The teams presented the findings yesterday at the American Astronomical Meeting in Miami.

    Check out DISCOVER’s page on Facebook.

    Related Content:
    DISCOVER: Seeing Sun Storms in Stereo
    80beats: Spacecraft-Collected Comet Dust Reveals Surprises from the Solar System’s Boondocks
    80beats: Dust Collected From Comet Contains a Key Ingredient For Life
    Bad Astronomy: 10 Things You Don’t Know About Comets

    Image: NASA


  • AT&T Can Save Their Network… With Wi-Fi? [At&t]

    AT&T’s latest idea is actually kind of brilliant on multiple levels: totally free Wi-Fi in Times Square. And it could be how they save their network. More »










    Wi-FiWirelessData Communications802.11Television

  • Ford Ka llamado a revisión

    Durante los últimos días han sido distintos los modelos que han sido llamados a revisión por diferentes fallos en su mecánica o electrónico. En esta ocasión, el modelo que centra todas las miradas es el Ford Ka, que deberá pasar por el taller debido a un problema con el cableado eléctrico principal que podría ocasionar fallos en el sistema del vehículo.

    Los modelos afectados son los fabricados entre el año 2007 y 2008. En un principio se estima que serán 23.000 unidades afectadas apróximadamente. Como es evidente en estos casos, Ford correrá con todos los gastos de estas revisiones y reparaciones en caso de ser necesarias.

    En caso de que ocurra alguna novedad sobre esta llamada a revisión os mantendremos informados.

    Related posts:

    1. Toyota Land Cruiser llamado a revisión
    2. Ford S-Max y Galaxy, restyling filtrados
    3. Ford Windstar investigado por la NHTSA
  • Satirical BP Twitter Account Has More Followers Than Real One

    A fake BP PR twitter account, BPGlobalPR, has started posted satirical tweets about the company’s response and attitude to the oil spill, and it has more followers than of the real BP Twitter accounts combined. And why not? Would you rather read, “BP Pledges $500 Million for Independent Research into Impact of Spill on Marine Environment” or “Doing our best to turn oil into oilinade. So far the stuff tastes TERRIBLE.”

    BP knows about the fake account but seems to content to leave it alone for now. WSJ:

    A BP spokesman said the company is aware of the BPGlobalPR account. “It’s a shame, but obviously people are entitled to their views,” a BP spokesman said, adding that the company is taking the spill “very seriously.”

    Oh no they didn’t! They didn’t just say that! Yes, they did.

    BPGlobalPR [Twitter]
    Fake BP Twitter Account Draws Followers With Oil-Spill Satire [WSJ]

  • Energy and Global Warming News for May 25: Semiconductor technique holds promise for solar energy; Postal Service inks $28M efficiency deal

    Semiconductor Manufacturing Technique Holds Promise for Solar Energy

    Thanks to a new semiconductor manufacturing method pioneered at the University of Illinois, the future of solar energy just got brighter.

    Although silicon is the industry standard semiconductor in most electronic devices, including the photovoltaic cells that solar panels use to convert sunlight into energy, it is hardly the most efficient material available. For example, the semiconductor gallium arsenide and related compound semiconductors offer nearly twice the efficiency as silicon in solar devices, yet they are rarely used in utility-scale applications because of their high manufacturing cost.

    U. of I. professors John Rogers and Xiuling Li explored lower-cost ways to manufacture thin films of gallium arsenide that also allowed versatility in the types of devices they could be incorporated into. “If you can reduce substantially the cost of gallium arsenide and other compound semiconductors, then you could expand their range of applications,” said Rogers, the Lee J. Flory Founder Chair in Engineering Innovation, and a professor of materials science and engineering and of chemistry.

    Typically, gallium arsenide is deposited in a single thin layer on a small wafer. Either the desired device is made directly on the wafer, or the semiconductor-coated wafer is cut up into chips of the desired size. The Illinois group decided to deposit multiple layers of the material on a single wafer, creating a layered, “pancake” stack of gallium arsenide thin films.

    “If you grow 10 layers in one growth, you only have to load the wafer one time,” said Li, a professor of electrical and computer engineering. “If you do this in 10 growths, loading and unloading with temperature ramp-up and ramp-down take a lot of time. If you consider what is required for each growth — the machine, the preparation, the time, the people — the overhead saving our approach offers is a significant cost reduction.”

    Next the researchers individually peel off the layers and transfer them. To accomplish this, the stacks alternate layers of aluminum arsenide with the gallium arsenide. Bathing the stacks in a solution of acid and an oxidizing agent dissolves the layers of aluminum arsenide, freeing the individual thin sheets of gallium arsenide. A soft stamp-like device picks up the layers, one at a time from the top down, for transfer to another substrate — glass, plastic or silicon, depending on the application. Then the wafer can be reused for another growth.

    U.S. Postal Service, GridPoint ink $28M deal

    Arlington, Va.-based GridPoint Inc. will supply energy management technology for as many as 2,250 post offices, under a contract designed to help the U.S. Postal Service meet its energy savings targets, the company announced today.

    Under the agreement, USPS will install GridPoint’s hardware and software in 750 medium-sized facilities in the first year, with options to add that number in each of two additional years to reach 2,250 sites in total. The maximum value of the contract is $28.7 million.

    GridPoint Executive Vice President John Clark said the installations would include hardware that allows users to more finely control the operations of heating, cooling and lighting systems, and software that provides visibility into how individual components and the whole system are using energy. “We give our customers both a speedometer and a tachometer for their energy use to see how they’re doing, as well as a gas pedal and a brake,” he said.

    The system is compatible with other vendors’ smart grid tools through a compatibility standard called BACnet, which would allow USPS to roll the resultant data in with information collected from other compliant tools for a big-picture view, Clark said.

    The system to be used splits control between local users and central planners, Clark added. A key feature allows a central facilities manager to set the default temperature for a number of linked facilities, but lets a local manager temporarily override that setting. If on-site employees want to increase the air conditioning level, for example, they can temporarily cool the facility more, but the setting eventually resets to the central office-approved default.

    Clark said a pilot at 16 USPS facilities in North Carolina showed that from a user-acceptance perspective, long-term changes to climate control systems need to be made slowly.

    First U.S. freshwater turbine farm proposed for Lake Erie

    General Electric Co. and Lake Erie Energy Development Corp. announced plans today to build the nation’s first offshore, freshwater wind farm near Cleveland.

    GE will provide five wind turbines and maintenance services for the 20-megawatt project, company officials noted at a wind energy industry conference in Dallas.

    Lake Erie Energy Development Corp. (LEEDCo), a nonprofit economic development corporation launched last year, is evaluating candidates to build the project. The project, which would cost roughly $90 million to build, would be located about 7 miles north of Cleveland in the waters of Lake Erie.

    LEEDCo President Lorry Wagner said his organization is evaluating three teams of companies to build the wind farm and begin producing power by late 2012. He declined to name the companies.

    “They’re all U.S.-based companies, but each group has different types of international experience, whether it’s developing offshore wind or oil and gas,” Wagner added.

    The developer would be responsible for inking a power-purchase agreement.

    GE will build the turbines in Europe, but LEEDCo officials hope the Lake Erie project spurs the industrial conglomerate to eventually build turbines in Ohio. LEEDCo has set a goal of generating 1,000 MW of cost-competitive wind power from Lake Erie by 2020, while leveraging the region’s manufacturing base.

    “It’s not about putting just 20 megawatts in the water, it’s about 2020,” Wagner said.

    LEEDCo’s founding partners include the Cleveland Foundation, city of Cleveland, Cuyahoga and Lorain counties, and NorTech.

    Climate change threatens the diversity of small mammals

    A period of rapid warming that ended roughly 11,700 years ago has had lasting changes on the diversity of small mammals in northern California, according to a new study.

    While many ecologists have warned that climate change could eventually drive many species to extinction, the authors of the new study say their work shows that warming can bring about more subtle, but enduring, changes.

    Fossils excavated from northern California’s Samwell Cave, at the foot of the Cascade Range, show that warming — and the arrival of humans — at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch changed the balance of the area’s small mammal populations.

    More adaptable, “weedy” species like deer mice became more common, while species that were already less abundant became even rarer.

    “If we only focus on extinction, we are not getting the whole story,” said lead author Jessica Blois, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in a statement. “There was a 30 percent decline in biodiversity due to other types of changes in the small-mammal community.”

    The effects are still apparent today, Blois and her co-authors found, based on their examination of the small mammals present near the cave today.

    The scientists say their work suggests that future climate change could have unanticipated consequences for the diversity of small mammal species, which perform important functions like aerating soil, dispersing seeds and providing prey for larger animals.

    The study was published Sunday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

    Gov. Deval Patrick: Cape Wind energy will be worth it

    Gov. Deval Patrick yesterday stoutly defended a multibillion-dollar rate agreement for Cape Wind electricity, saying it will provide ratepayers with a stable source of renewable energy.

    Patrick’s comments came as Cape Wind Associates and Nstar met yesterday about a possible long-term contract for Cape Wind’s electricity from its proposed offshore wind farm. The two sides yesterday declined comment on the substance of the talks.

    Cape Wind has already signed a long-term agreement with National Grid, which agreed to pay Cape Wind about double the price of today’s electricity.

    Asked if expensive offshore wind was appropriate when land-based wind is only half the cost, Patrick said “we need a variety” of clean-energy fuels. “We need it all,” Patrick told a reporter before a speaking event at the Suffolk University Law School.

    Patrick said the Cape Wind-National Grid agreement will cost the average user of 550 kilowatts about $1.59 a month, though critics say the price will be far higher for large users of electricity.

    The Department of Public Utilities is reviewing the Cape Wind-National Grid agreement. The agency would also review any pact with Nstar.

    China Huaneng Signs $1.2 Billion Wind-Turbine Accord

    China Huaneng Group, the country’s largest power producer, agreed to buy wind turbines from six domestic suppliers for 8.06 billion yuan ($1.2 billion) in total to meet rising demand for clean energy.

    The Beijing-based parent of Hong Kong-listed Huaneng Power International Inc signed a framework agreement yesterday with suppliers including Sinovel Wind Group Co. and Shanghai Electric Group for the purchase of 1,800 megawatts of generating units, China Huaneng said in a statement on its website today.

    China wants at least 15 percent of its energy to come from renewable sources including wind by 2020. Investment in renewable energy in the world’s biggest polluter reached $6.5 billion in the first quarter, the most for any country, New Energy Finance said on April 12. Huaneng Power posted a 41 percent gain in profit during the period.

    The other wind-turbine suppliers include Dongfang Electric Corp., China Shipbuilding Industry Corp., Zhejiang Machinery and Electrical Group and a Guangdong-based manufacturer, according to the statement. The six turbine makers will each supply about 300 megawatts of capacity, China Huaneng said.

    China Huaneng plans to have 20,000 megawatts of wind-power capacity by 2020, or about 10 percent of its total estimated generating capacity by then, according to today’s statement. The group currently has 2,800 megawatts of wind-power capacity.

    The state-run company is seeking to set up wind farms in northern China and in coastal areas in the country’s southeast, China Huaneng said. Its unit Huaneng Power plans to spend 1.2 billion yuan on new wind projects this year, Chief Accountant Zhou Hui said on March 25.

    Huaneng Power has risen 2.5 percent in Hong Kong trading this year, beating the 12 percent drop in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. The stock was at HK$4.50 at the midday break, down 2.2 percent.

    Blair to advise Silicon Valley group on climate

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair is joining a Silicon Valley business as a senior adviser on environmental issues.

    Khosla Ventures announced the association with Blair on Monday during its limited partner summit in Sausalito.

    The firm, started by Sun Microsystems Inc. co-founder Vinod Khosla, has invested in companies pursuing alternative fuel strategies and other environmentally-minded technologies.

    Menlo Park’s Khosla Ventures has invested companies including Cogenra Solar Inc., which wants to multiply the energy efficiency of solar cells, and Calera, which is converting manmade greenhouse gas emissions into sustainable building products.

    Khosla said Blair will advise the companies it invest in on how to meet their business goals.

    “He’s going to help us in many areas that techie nerds like us here in Silicon Valley don’t understand and tend to underestimate the importance of,” Khosla said.

    Since leaving office three years ago, Blair has urged policy makers and businessmen to work together on environmental problems.

    “I’m more and more convinced that unless we connect and align the public policy space with the creativity and ingenuity and innovation of the entrepreneurs, we’re not going to resolve this issue,” Blair said. “The answer to this has got to lie in science and technology.”

    It wasn’t disclosed how much Blair would be getting paid in this new advisory role. Blair said he would continue to work on his other projects, including his “Breaking the Climate Deadlock Initiative” in support of an international framework on climate change.

    Nuclear Reactor Aims for Self-Sustaining Fusion

    In a few years, an experimental nuclear fusion reactor near Moscow could be the first to yield a self-sustaining fusion reaction. If the Italian-Russian project is successful, it would be a key milestone for fusion power.

    The proposed reactor is based on a design developed by Bruno Coppi, a professor of physics at MIT, and principal investigator on the reactor project with Italy’s National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and the Environment. Three similar reactors based on the same design have already been built at MIT. Italian and Russian physicists plan to meet on May 24 to chart a course for the new reactor, called Ignitor, in the first such meeting since the two countries agreed to join forces on the project in April.

    Ignitor is a tokamak reactor, a doughnut-shaped device that uses powerful magnetic fields to produce fusion by squeezing superheated plasma of hydrogen isotopes. As an electric current and high-frequency radio waves pass through the plasma, heating it to extreme temperatures, the surrounding electromagnetic field confines the plasma under high pressure. The combined pressure and heat causes the hydrogen nuclei to fuse together to form helium in a process that releases tremendous amounts of heat. In a fully functional fusion reactor, this heat would be used to power an electricity-generating turbine.

    A much larger, far more complex tokamak fusion reactor–the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER)–is planned for construction in Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France. ITER, which will be completed in 2019 and ready for full-scale testing in 2026, will be closer to a functioning fusion generator but will not produce a self-sustaining fusion reaction. Ignitor will be a sixth the size of ITER and will test the conditions needed to produce a self-sustaining reaction.

    “Ignitor will give us a quick look at how burning plasma behaves, and that could inform how we proceed with ITER and other reactors,” says Roscoe White, a distinguished research fellow at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.

    But Ignitor will only test one key aspect of fusion. “It will give us information that is important, but it won’t give us all the information we need and certainly doesn’t replace ITER,” Steven Cowley, director of the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy in Oxfordshire, U.K. “It’s a demonstration that you can create ignition, but it’s not really a pathway to a reactor.”

    Unlike ITER, Ignitor doesn’t include many of the components that a real reactor would require. For example one crucial missing part is the “breeder blanket,” which contains lithium and sits inside the reactor’s magnetic coils, providing a continuous supply of tritium–one of two isotopes fused in the reaction. Ignitor’s design is so compact that there is no room for a test blanket inside its coils.

  • Best Buy Shorted Me $70 When I Returned Stereo Equipment

    Ashley says she succumbed to a high-pressure upsell in car stereo equipment at Best Buy based on a free installation pitch, only to decide she wanted to return the stuff. When she completed the return she found out the installation wasn’t free, but discounted to accommodate a nonrefundable installation fee.

    She writes:

    Best Buy has cost me a LOT of time and money over a car stereo install. They LIED to me [in the Phoenix area] saying I was getting a free install, talked me into [nearly] 300 dollars worth of equipment when I made it clear I really only wanted to spend 200 hundred, and took FOREVER to install my stereo.

    I exchanged it in Tucson and was all of the sudden the promotion that I was offered didn’t exist (what? this is a huge corporation, why aren’t sales the same all across the board). Tucson did the RIGHT thing and waived my install fee and gave me what I wanted, but I noticed that I purchased only $180 worth of equipment but was told it was an even exchange…and it was because they lied to me at [the Phoenix Best Buy] and said the install was free when they merely took the discount off the equipment.

    When I called the general manager at [Phoenix] and asked him to please refund my 70 dollars he was really rude to me and refused to accommodate my request even though I still have thousands of dollars in electronics I need to purchase, so I got a little hotheaded and told him he would never get my business again, but I want to make sure that since I can’t get my 70 dollars back, Best Buy loses a LOT more than what they robbed from me.

    What should Ashley do to get her money back?

  • Sony’s PSN+ Service to Seriously Compete With Xbox Live? [PS3]

    According to a rumor over on Joystick, Sony is set to announce PSN+ at E3 next month, a premium version of their PlayStation Network service. The alleged benefits sound fantastic. More »










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